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The Pentagon finally reveals what Trump's mysterious 'super duper missile' actually is

A common hypersonic glide body (C-HGB) launches from Pacific Missile Range Facility, Kauai, Hawaii, at approximately 10:30 p.m. local time, March 19, 2020, during a Department of Defense flight experiment.
A common hypersonic glide body is launched during a Defense Department flight experiment at the Pacific Missile Range Facility in Kauai, Hawaii, March 19, 2020.

US Navy

  • A senior Pentagon official told CNN on Thursday what the "super duper missile" that President Donald Trump first brought up in the Oval Office in May actually is.

  • The official said Trump was referring to a hypersonic glide body test that the Pentagon conducted in March.

  • Trump claimed the new weapon is 17 times faster than anything currently available, but the defense official told CNN that the weapon is actually able to fly at 17 times the speed of sound.

  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The Department of Defense finally revealed what President Donald Trump's so-called super duper missile actually is, with a senior defense official telling CNN that the president's previous descriptions were close but not quite right.

In May, Trump boasted about US military strength in the Oval Office and in the process announced that the US is building a new missile he said was much faster than anything currently available.

"We're building incredible military equipment at a level that nobody has ever seen before. We have no choice with the adversaries we have out there," the president said.

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"We have — I call it, the 'super duper missile,'" Trump said, explaining that he "heard the other night, 17 times faster than what they have right now. You've heard Russia has five times and China's working on five or six times. We have one 17 times, and it's just gotten the go-ahead."

In June, the president claimed that the weapon could strike a target 1,000 miles away, hitting within 14 inches of center point.

The prevailing view of the president's comments has been that the president was referring to some type of hypersonic weapon. The Department of Defense said in a statement shortly after the president's first remarks that the Pentagon "is working on developing a range of hypersonic missiles to counter our adversaries."

"What he was referring to, really, was the recent flight test that we've performed in March where we flew 17 times the speed of sound," a senior defense official told CNN Thursday.

Toward the end of March, the US military successfully carried out a flight test of a glide body for future hypersonic weaponry.

"Today we validated our design and are now ready to move to the next phase towards fielding a hypersonic strike capability," said Vice Adm. Johnny R. Wolfe, the director of Navy's Strategic Systems Programs, said in March.

The Pentagon said in a statement that the glide body "flew at hypersonic speed to a designated impact point," adding that "this event is a major milestone towards the department's goal of fielding hypersonic warfighting capabilities in the early- to mid-2020s."

Hypersonic weapons are a key area of great-power competition between the US, China, and Russia, and fielding hypersonic weapons is a top priority for the Pentagon.

Hypersonic missiles fly at speeds of at least five times the speed of sound, but their speed — faster than a cruise missile but slower than a ballistic missile — is not what makes them deadly. These weapons fly along unpredictable flight paths, making them very difficult for traditional air-and-missile defense systems to intercept.

A missile able to fly at 17 times than the speed of sound is an impressive feat, but US adversaries claim they can beat that. Russia, for instance, claims its Avangard hypersonic glide vehicle, a weapon launched atop an intercontinental ballistic missile, can fly at speeds 27 times the speed of sound. Russia put the Avangard into an operational status last December.

China, another US strategic rival, unveiled its DF-17 hypersonic glide vehicle during a military parade last fall.

The US Army intends to field a ground-launched hypersonic weapon in 2023, with the Navy fielding a ship-launched variant the same year, Defense News reported in March following the glide body test. A submarine-launched version is expected in 2024.

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